Biography: Sendowski Moshe (1931) was born in Poland and immigrated to Israel in 1947. His first home was Kvutzat Kineret, where he felt secure and managed to express the feelings of freedom and pride of which he was deprived during the Holocaust. When Kibbutz Haon was founded, he became one of its founding members. Sendowski has been filled with an urge to create since early boyhood. He managed combine his creativity with his work as technical art and creation teacher in elementary and high schools, as well as in teachers' seminars. Sendowski is a self-thought artist, and the art is his way of life. His feelings and reflections are expressed in wood, stone, marble, clay and bronze. Under his hands these materials become partly figurative to abstract forms. The woman in his sculptures becomes a creative power, a symbol on motherhood and fertility. Moments of pain and torture are expressed by distortion of the body, as well as convergence and introversion, and feelings of elation and joy are expressed by open and flowing movements. Sendowski is an active member of the Israeli Painters' and Sculptors' Association. His sculptors have had great success and can be found in museums, galleries, private collections and public places, such as the President's Residence in Jerusalem, the Technion in Haifa and Town Hall in Nataniya.